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A View of Chinsura the Dutch Settlement in Bengal (1787). Dutch India (Dutch: Nederlands Indië) consisted of the settlements and trading posts of the Dutch East India Company on the Indian subcontinent. It is only used as a geographical definition, as there was never a political authority ruling all Dutch India.
[25] [26] [27] Dutch architects and scholars now intend to support efforts to restore these early Dutch settlements. The Dutch Hospital building in Pulicat dating from 1640 is to be renovated in the near future. [28] Sadras still features a Dutch fort and a cemetery. [29] Although the remains of Fort Vijf Sinnen and the Dutch cemetery in ...
Quilon rulers submit to the Dutch at Quilon. Dutch Malabar (Dutch; Nederlandse Malabar. Malayalam; ഡച്ച് മലബാർ.) also known by the name of its main settlement Cochin, were a collection of settlements and trading factories of the Dutch East India Company on the Malabar Coast between 1661 and 1795, and was a subdivision of what was collectively referred to as Dutch India.
Dutch settlements in Bengal include: Dutch settlement in Rajshahi; In Chhapra was a saltpeter factory (1666 -1781)(seized by British) Baleswar or Balasore (1675 -) Patna (1638)(1645-1651)(1651-1781)(seized by British) Cossimbazar or Kassamabazar; Malda; Mirzapur (in Bardhaman, West Bengal) Baliapal or Pipeli, the main port for the Dutch between ...
The Dutch colonial empire (Dutch: Nederlandse koloniale rijk) comprised the overseas territories and trading posts controlled and administered by Dutch chartered companies—mainly the Dutch East India Company and the Dutch West India Company—and subsequently by the Dutch Republic (1581–1795), and by the modern Kingdom of the Netherlands after 1815.
The following were trading posts owned by the Dutch East India Company, ... Dutch settlement in Rajshahi; India. Konkan (northern part of western coast of India)
Fort Geldria or Fort Geldaria, located in Pulicat, Tamil Nadu, was the seat of the Dutch Republic's first settlement in India, and the capital of Dutch Coromandel. [1] It was built by the Dutch East India Company in 1613 and became the local governmental centre in 1616. [2]
Fort Geldria or Fort Geldaria, located in Pulicat, was the seat of the Dutch Republic's first settlement in India, and the capital of Dutch Coromandel. [2] It was built by the Dutch East India Company in 1613 and became the local governmental centre in 1616. [3]